International audienceProfiling the diversity of land use in modern cities by mining data related to human mobility represents a challenging problem in urban planning, transportation and smart city management. Previous work on mobile phone data (i.e., Call Detail Records) has shown the existence of strong correlations between the urban tissue and the associated mobile communication demand. Similarly, GPS traces of vehicles convey information on transportation demand and human activities that can be related to the land use of the neighborhood where they take place. In this paper, we investigate the land use patterns that emerge when studying simultaneously GPS traces of probe vehicles and mobile phone data collected by network providers. To ...